Science
in sentence
4134 examples of Science in a sentence
They post projects like, "I want to teach Huckleberry Finn and we don't have the books," or, "I want a microscope to teach my students
science
and we don't have a microscope."
You might remember the old pictures of the atom from
science
class, where you saw this tiny dot on the page with an arrow pointing to the nucleus.
And I had gone to cover this contest a few years back as a
science
journalist, expecting, I guess, that this was going to be like the Superbowl of savants.
That's the kind of out-of-the-box
science
that I love doing ... for the betterment of mankind, but especially for her, so that she can grow up in a world without malaria.
To me it represents the perfect intersection of science, technology and the unknown, the spark for so many breakthrough discoveries about life on our planet.
Can you see how this satellite leverages the best of
science
and data and technology?
Science
couldn't agree more.
So you tell me why, in our age of science, we still have laws and policies which come from an age of superstition.
These laws fly in the face of science, and they are grounded in prejudice and in ignorance and in a rewriting of tradition and a selective reading of religion.
That's French
science.
Now with the allocation and the understanding of the lack of understanding, we enter into a new era of
science
in which we feel nothing more than so much so as to say that those within themselves, comporary or non-comporary, will figuratively figure into the folding of our non-understanding and our partial understanding to the networks of which we all draw our source and conclusions from.
As we move into the future, and we start going out into space and doing stuff, we're drawing a lot from things like
science
fiction.
And all my favorite
science
fiction movies I want to play out here as different dynamics.
There's plenty of real estate, plenty of real estate in the universe, and if we're the only bit of real estate in which there's some interesting occupants, that makes you a miracle, and I know you like to think you're a miracle, but if you do science, you learn rather quickly that every time you think you're a miracle, you're wrong, so probably not the case.
I also think that exploration is important in terms of being able to address what I think is a critical lack in our society, and that is the lack of
science
literacy, the lack of the ability to even understand
science.
Now, look, a lot has been written about the deplorable state of
science
literacy in this country.
It can address the problem by getting young people interested in
science.
Look,
science
is hard, it has a reputation of being hard, and the facts are, it is hard, and that's the result of 400 years of science, right?
I mean, in the 18th century, in the 18th century you could become an expert on any field of
science
in an afternoon by going to a library, if you could find the library, right?
Because there was all this
science
just lying around waiting for somebody to pick it up.
So that doesn't get people interested in
science
because they can't comprehend what it's about.
The other thing is, it's exciting
science.
This allows you to pay it forward by using this subject as a hook to science, because SETI involves all kinds of science, obviously biology, obviously astronomy, but also geology, also chemistry, various scientific disciplines all can be presented in the guise of, "We're looking for E.T."
I think that if you can instill some interest in
science
and how it works, well, that's a payoff beyond easy measure.
And by the way, this is not a debate that we're ready for, because we have really misused the
science
in this.
So to sum up: Twenty years ago, I had a college adviser tell me, when I went to the college and said, "I'm kind of interested in anatomy," they said, "Anatomy's a dead science."
That's one of the reasons so much of what we've come to think of as Western
science
and mathematics and engineering was really worked out in the first few centuries of the Common Era by the Persians and the Arabs and the Turks.
The
science
is there.
But no
science
is of relevance if it doesn't have an impact on the community.
And using these kinds of measures and many others, what we found out is that our
science
could, in fact, identify this condition early on.
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